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Few people outside the "biz" know that Sinatra co-wrote the ultra-haunting I'm A Fool To Want You -- a kind of "crying-in-my-Jack Daniels" lament defining his doomed relationship with Ava Gardner, referenced in virtually every Sinatra biography.I saw Sinatra live and he didn't even do a show to speak of. He stood on the stage and sang with no gimmicks. That takes balls and "REAL" talent.
I think the widely-acknowledged spark was actually this Bill Haley hit (even though Elvis's more properly termed "rockabilly" experiments did begin with the 1954 tune you cite:After WWII in the early 50's, things were not too bad for most folks. But the young were kinda bored and just waiting for something to happen. And in 1954 it did in a big way.......Elvis recorded "That's All Right, Mama", which was the spark that put in all in motion
Kind of a crappy table to boot. If he had any interest he would have a better table then that. At the time he was alive and using that table it is like a $600.00 table. I actually have a table just like that in storage.
Anybody that says Elvis did not have talent is crazy. Just try to do what he did and get back to me with the results. Many a talent was ravaged by drugs.
That's an interesting shot of that drome in the film.One of my favorite movies was Roustabout.
The guy who did the riding for Elvis in that movie was my first Motor Drome boss, Sonny.
He rode for Elvis and it was his Motor Drome used in the movie. I never did ride that Drome but many of my Friends and fellow riders did.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOrqSNVzUZ0&feature=player_detailpage#t=116
So I am a tad bias.
I don't think you read all my postings, I said I was a fan even going to three of his concerts.Elvis had a beautiful voice. I have a fair amount of my Elvis favorites, including many of his Gospel songs which can't be matched, in my opinion anyway.
When I was young, I loved his movies as any young person did. If I were to watch any of them now, I would probably think they were a bit B Grade. I would still watch them out of principle.
Like, at the time of Elvis movies, we also had Franky Avalon and Annette Funicello. I doubt they won any Academy Awards for Beach Blanket Bingo, or any of the rest of the Beach movies. Gidget Goes to Hawaii etc.
Around the same time, we had Dean Martin's Matt Helm movies and Our Man Flint.
Watch pretty much any of the movies from that time period, including many Westerns.
All serious B Grade by today's standards.
I have no idea as to why Mac's Hate on for Elvis, other than his love was probably spurned on more than one occasion by young girls who would rather go to an Elvis movie than spend time with him.
Even selling concert tickets for a buck 25, he still had more money than any of us could dream of. He must have been doing something right, otherwise the record labels and movie producers would have dropped him like a hot potato.
There used to be some guys years ago who called themselves "The Hell Riders" and they had one of those things they traveled with. That thing was scary looking up close.One of my favorite movies was Roustabout.
The guy who did the riding for Elvis in that movie was my first Motor Drome boss, Sonny.
He rode for Elvis and it was his Motor Drome used in the movie. I never did ride that Drome but many of my Friends and fellow riders did.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOrqSNVzUZ0&feature=player_detailpage#t=116
So I am a tad bias.
Elvis had a beautiful voice. I have a fair amount of my Elvis favorites, including many of his Gospel songs which can't be matched, in my opinion anyway.
When I was young, I loved his movies as any young person did. If I were to watch any of them now, I would probably think they were a bit B Grade. I would still watch them out of principle.
Like, at the time of Elvis movies, we also had Franky Avalon and Annette Funicello. I doubt they won any Academy Awards for Beach Blanket Bingo, or any of the rest of the Beach movies. Gidget Goes to Hawaii etc.
Around the same time, we had Dean Martin's Matt Helm movies and Our Man Flint.
Watch pretty much any of the movies from that time period, including many Westerns.
All serious B Grade by today's standards.
I have no idea as to why Mac's Hate on for Elvis, other than his love was probably spurned on more than one occasion by young girls who would rather go to an Elvis movie than spend time with him.
Even selling concert tickets for a buck 25, he still had more money than any of us could dream of. He must have been doing something right, otherwise the record labels and movie producers would have dropped him like a hot potato.
I don't know how good Elvis played pool but he had an incredible voice and great stage presence and tons of confidence!! One thing that always blew my mind is he never wrote a single song his entire career!! "The King" never composed a single song. It made me realize the public doesn't give a hoot who writes your music, just make it good! Three Dog Night never wrote a song either and they had a great career...
I don't think you read all my postings, I said I was a fan even going to three of his concerts.
I read that amazingly even though he had generated over a billion dollars in earnings in his career, at his death he had a net worth of 10 million. This included cash, real estate, collectables, jewelry and so on.
On the scale he lived, this would put him at almost broke needing to constantly keep generate an income. It did not even look like he had any investments to fall back on. He was not smart, records show him with an IQ in the 70's.
Without Colonel Parker Elvis would likely been a truck driver. He was probably not smart enough to reach his first ambition to be an electrician like he told school counselors.
Not everybody who is successful is smart. Muhammad Ali was so dumb he was first time around excluded from military service due to a low IQ. Later when they reclassified him was the well known court case when he refused to take the oath.